16, 17 and 18 May 2023
During an inspection of Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
We carried out this unannounced focused inspection because we received information giving us concerns about the safety and quality of the service.
We rated the service as requires improvement, with all five domains of safe, effective, caring, responsive and well led rated as requires improvement.
We visited all of the acute and psychiatric intensive care unit (PICU) wards provided by the trust at the following locations:
The Dales, Calderdale Royal Hospital:
- Elmdale ward, a 24-bed female acute ward
- Ashdale ward, a 24-bed male acute ward
Priestley Unit, Dewsbury and District Hospital:
- Ward 18, a 23-bed mixed gender acute ward
Fieldhead Hospital, Wakefield:
- Nostell ward, a 22-bed female acute ward
- Stanley ward, a 22-bed male acute ward
- Walton PICU, a 14-bed mixed gender PICU
Kendray Hospital Barnsley:
- Clark ward, a 14-bed female acute ward
- Beamshaw ward, a 14-bed male acute ward
- Melton PICU, a 6-bed mixed gender PICU
Our rating of services went down. We rated them as requires improvement because:
- Staffing pressures within some specific staff groups were impacting on the experience of patients and the quality of care they received.
- Physical restraint of patients in the prone position (face down) was used more frequently than national guidance recommends.
- People were not always adequately monitored following the administration of emergency medication or while in seclusion.
- People did not always have access to psychological therapies in line with recommended national guidance relating to their condition (for example, individuals with a diagnosis of personality disorder).
- A high proportion of staff were not having regular performance appraisals in line with the trust’s appraisal policy.
- Staff were not receiving mandatory training on meeting the needs of people with a learning disability and/or autistic people in line with the national recommendation that all staff working within a CQC registered service should receive this at a level appropriate to their role.
- When people had their capacity to consent to their treatment formally assessed, this was not always appropriately documented in their care records.
- Records did not always show that people using the service and their relatives were meaningfully involved in their care.
- At Kendray Hospital the wards were running at over 100% occupancy (due to the practice of admitting new patients to the bed of someone who was on authorised leave from the hospital) and there had been a number of admissions to non-bedroom areas such as lounges.
- The care environment did not always meet the needs of the patients, particularly where people had additional needs due to protected characteristics such as disability or religion.
However:
- The wards were clean and free from avoidable risks including ligature risks, staff regularly assessed environmental risks and took action to mitigate these.
- Staff complied with best practice in relation to infection prevention and control including hand hygiene and wearing appropriate personal protective equipment.
- Medicines were managed safely and records of the storage and administration of medicines were accurate and up to date.
- Staff were aware of their responsibilities in relation to safeguarding adults at risk of abuse and raised safeguarding concerns appropriately.
- Staff complied with the requirements of the Mental Health Act and the Mental Capacity Act.
- Staff treated people kindly and with respect, we observed positive and supportive interactions between patients and staff on the wards.
- People could give feedback about their experience and changes were made as a result of this. Complaints were investigated in a timely manner and people received a response to their concerns.
- Senior leaders created a culture on the wards where patients and staff felt supported and were able to express their views.
- There were systems in place for monitoring the quality of care and effective assurance processes to inform the trust board of the standard of care on the acute and PICU wards.
How we carried out the inspection
Before the inspection visit, we reviewed information that we held about the location.
During the inspection visit, the inspection team:
• visited all 9 wards and looked at the quality of the environment
• spent time on the wards observing how staff were caring for people
• observed a governance meeting and a ward round
• spoke with 33 patients on all 9 wards
• spoke with 12 relatives/carers
• spoke with 7 care co-ordinators for patients on the wards
• received feedback from a independent mental health advocate who visits the wards
• spoke with members of the senior management team including 1 service manager, 1 matron, 7 ward managers and 2 clinical leads
• spoke with 6 doctors including consultants, specialty doctors and junior doctors
• spoke with 25 other staff members including nurses, health care assistants, occupational therapists, activity coordinators, psychologists and discharge coordinators
• looked at the prescription charts for all patients, 20 full sets of care and treatment records and other care records, for example seclusion and restraint records
• looked at a range of policies, procedures and other documents relating to the running of the wards.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: https://www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.
What people who use the service say
The patients we spoke with gave us a mixture of positive and negative feedback about the service. People mostly told us that the wards were clean, they felt safe and staff managed incidents of aggression well. Some people told us there was always enough staff on duty, but some said the wards were often short staffed and there were a lot of agency workers, particularly on the night shift, which had a negative impact on the quality of their care at times. Most of the people we spoke with said their community leave and/or activities had been cancelled due to staffing pressures on at least one occasion.
People told us that staff treated them kindly and, if they had been subjected to any restrictive interventions such as physical restraint or seclusion, this had been done respectfully and safely. People usually felt they were given enough information about their medicines and said they could access a doctor when they needed to, although some people said there were delays in doctors attending out of normal working hours. Some of the people we spoke with said they felt involved in their care and they were able to give feedback about their experience, but some people felt less involved. People told us that staff gave them privacy as much as possible and they were able to access quiet spaces on the ward. Everyone we spoke with was able to access fresh air sometimes, but patients at The Dales, Priestley Unit and Kendray Hospital had more limited access to outside space, which some people found frustrating.
People gave positive feedback about the occupational therapy support they were receiving overall. Some people said there was not a lot to do on the ward, particularly at weekends. Some people told us that the care environment did not meet their individual needs, for example cultural dietary needs or accessibility needs due to a disability. People knew how to raise concerns about their care and they mostly told us that these were taken seriously and problems were addressed.
The carers we spoke with told us that they were happy overall with the care their relative was receiving in hospital. They said the wards or visiting rooms they saw when they visited were clean and they were able to visit as often as they liked, spending regular time with their relative both at the hospital and away from it (when the person had been granted leave). Relatives told us that most of the staff were kind and supportive towards their family member, although some people told us that individual staff members seemed less interested in their relative, particularly on the night shift.
Several of the carers we spoke with said the ward their relative was on seemed to be short staffed. Some of the people we spoke with said they did not feel that staff kept them informed about their relative’s progress or involve them in decisions and most said they had not been offered any information about the support available to them as a carer. Some relatives said they felt there was a lack of organisation and streamlined processes on the wards, which made it challenging for them to keep up with how their relative was doing.